He is a professor at the European Graduate School, International Director of the Birkbeck Institute for the Humanities, Birkbeck College, University of London, and a senior researcher at the Institute of Sociology, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia.

His books include Living in the End Times, First as Tragedy, Then as Farce, In Defense of Lost Causes, four volumes of the Essential Žižek, and many more.

Transcript--

Capitalism is... and this, almost I'm tempted to say is what is great about it, although I'm very critical of it...

Capitalism is more an ethical/religious category for me.

It's not true when people attack capitalists as egotists. "They don't care." No! An ideal capitalist is someone who is ready, again, to stake his life, to risk everything just so that production grows, profit grows, capital circulates.

His personal or her happiness is totally subordinated to this. This is what I think Walter Benjamin, the great Frankfurt School companion, thinker, had in mind when he said capitalism is a form of religion.

You cannot explain, account for, a figure of a passionate capitalist, obsessed with expanded circulation, with rise of his company, in terms of personal happiness.

I am, of course, fundamentally anti-capitalist. But let's not have any illusions here. No.

What shocks me is that most of the critics of today's capitalism feel even embarrassed, that's my experience, when you confront them with a simple question, "Okay, we heard your story . . . protest horrible, big banks depriving us of billions, hundreds, thousands of billions of common people's money. . . .

Okay, but what do you really want? What should replace the system?"

And then you get one big confusion. You get either a general moralistic answer, like "People shouldn't serve money. Money should serve people."

Well, frankly, Hitler would have agreed with it, especially because he would say, "When people serve money, money's controlled by Jews," and so on, no?

So either this or some kind of a vague connection, social democracy, or a simple moralistic critique, and so on and so on. So, you know, it's easy to be just formally anti-capitalist, but what does it really mean? It's totally open.

This is why, as I always repeat, with all my sympathy for Occupy Wall Street movement, it's result was . . .

I call it a Bartleby lesson. Bartleby, of course, Herman Melville's Bartleby, you know, who always answered his favorite "I would prefer not to" . . .

The message of Occupy Wall Street is, I would prefer not to play the existing game.

There is something fundamentally wrong with the system and the existing forms of institutionalized democracy are not strong enough to deal with problems. Beyond this, they don't have an answer and neither do I. For me, Occupy Wall Street is just a signal. It's like clearing the table.

Time to start thinking.

The other thing, you know, it's a little bit boring to listen to this mantra of "Capitalism is in its last stage." When this mantra started, if you read early critics of capitalism, I'm not kidding, a couple of decades before French Revolution, in late eighteenth century. No, the miracle of capitalism is that it's rotting in decay, but the more it's rotting, the more it thrives. So, let's confront that serious problem here.

Also, let's not remember--and I'm saying this as some kind of a communist--that the twentieth century alternatives to capitalism and market miserably failed. . . .

Like, okay, in Soviet Union they did try to get rid of the predominance of money market economy. The price they paid was a return to violent direct master and servant, direct domination, like you no longer will even formally flee. You had to obey orders, a new authoritarian society. . . .

And this is a serious problem: how to abolish market without regressing again into relations of servitude and domination.

My advice would be--because I don't have simple answers--two things:
(a) precisely to start thinking. Don't get caught into this pseudo-activist pressure. Do something. Let's do it, and so on. So, no, the time is to think.

I even provoked some of the leftist friends when I told them that if the famous Marxist formula was, "Philosophers have only interpreted the world; the time is to change it" . . . thesis 11 . . . ,

that maybe today we should say,

"In the twentieth century, we maybe tried to change the world too quickly. The time is to interpret it again, to start thinking."

(b) Second thing, I'm not saying people are suffering, enduring horrible things, that we should just sit and think, but we should be very careful what we do.

Here, let me give you a surprising example. I think that, okay, it’s so fashionable today to be disappointed at President Obama, of course, but sometimes

I’m a little bit shocked by this disappointment because what did the people expect, that he will introduce socialism in United States or what?

But for example, the ongoing universal health care debate is an important one. This is a great thing.

Why?

Because, on the one hand, this debate which taxes the very roots of ordinary American ideology, you know, freedom of choice, states wants to take freedom from us and so on.

I think this freedom of choice that Republicans attacking Obama are using, its pure ideology.

But at the same time, universal health care is not some crazy, radically leftist notion. It’s something that exists all around and functions basically relatively well--Canada, most of Western European countries.

So the beauty is to select a topic which touches the fundamentals of our ideology, but at the same time, we cannot be accused of promoting an impossible agenda--like abolish all private property or what.

No, it’s something that can be done and is done relatively successfully and so on.

So that would be my idea, to carefully select issues like this where we do stir up public debate but we cannot be accused of being utopians in the bad sense of the term.

Monday, August 20, 2012

Rick led a meditation on Valentine's Day for a friend of his wife's who had received roses on that day.
At the conclusion of the meditation, she opened her eyes and her gaze fell upon the roses. She remarked
on how much more vivid they seemed to be after the meditation. As she had become mindful, her senses
were temporarily amplified and she had seen the roses in a new way.

The common expression "stop and smell the roses," is really a reminder to be mindful.This is how the series was named.

Seeing the Roses is a series of videos about consumerism and the planet. It promotes the practice of mindfuness as a way to increase our sensations of pleasure, happiness and love.
Americans are twice as rich than fifty years ago, but not happier. What's going on?

Consumerism is a kind of soft addiction that overtakes the brain's
reward centers. Just as people can become habituated to drugs, and
require larger and larger doses in order to get high, we have
become habituated to our possessions and seek more and newer possessions
in order to maintain the same level of happiness.

Mindfulness can reverse habituation and help people gain lasting
satisfaction from the things they have so that they don't need to
accumulate more things. The less we buy, the less gets made, and the
less pollution there is to damage the planet.

Friday, August 10, 2012

I found one day in school a boy of medium size ill-treating a smaller boy. I expostulated, but he replied: The bigs hit me, so I hit the babies; that's fair. In these words he epitomized the history of the human race.
- Bertrand Russell

“All you need in this life is ignorance and confidence; then success is sure. ”
― Mark Twain

"In the confrontation between the stream and the rock, the stream always wins
- not by strength but by perseverance." - H. Jackson Brown

“Don't mistake activity with achievement.”
― John Wooden

“Supreme excellence consists of breaking the enemy's resistance without fighting.”
― Sun Tzu, The Art of War

“Whatever the mind can conceive and believe, it can achieve.”
― Napoleon Hill, Think and Grow Rich

“Don't aim at success. The more you aim at it and make it a target, the more you are going to miss it. For success, like happiness, cannot be pursued; it must ensue, and it only does so as the unintended side effect of one's personal dedication to a cause greater than oneself or as the by-product of one's surrender to a person other than oneself. Happiness must happen, and the same holds for success: you have to let it happen by not caring about it. I want you to listen to what your conscience commands you to do and go on to carry it out to the best of your knowledge. Then you will live to see that in the long-run—in the long-run, I say!—success will follow you precisely because you had forgotten to think about it”

― Viktor E. Frankl, Man's Search for Meaning

“I want to do it because I want to do it. Women must try to do things as men have tried. When they fail, their failure must be but a challenge to others.”
― Amelia Earhart

“Over the years, I have come to realize that the greatest trap in our life is not success, popularity, or power, but self-rejection. Success, popularity, and power can indeed present a great temptation, but their seductive quality often comes from the way they are part of the much larger temptation to self-rejection. When we have come to believe in the voices that call us worthless and unlovable, then success, popularity, and power are easily perceived as attractive solutions. The real trap, however, is self-rejection. As soon as someone accuses me or criticizes me, as soon as I am rejected, left alone, or abandoned, I find myself thinking, "Well, that proves once again that I am a nobody." ... [My dark side says,] I am no good... I deserve to be pushed aside, forgotten, rejected, and abandoned. Self-rejection is the greatest enemy of the spiritual life because it contradicts the sacred voice that calls us the "Beloved." Being the Beloved constitutes the core truth of our existence.”

Conservation authorities
believe there are less than 250 individuals of this magnificent bird
surviving. Living in Brazil for the most part, there are a tiny number
in Argentina and it has been extirpated from Paraguay. Unfortunately,
all trends of the merganser population are downward, following work on
hydroelectric dams, silting and pollution of rivers from agricultural
activities, as well as mining, all leading to deforestation. Hopefully,
groups like Birdlife International and Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust will be able to help increase and stabilize the population in the future.

The Honduran Emerald
hummingbird is a flitting jewel in the dry forest, darting between
bromeliad flowers, acacias and cacti while snapping up small insects
midair. It is the only bird exclusive to Honduras and critically
endangered, with fewer than 1,000 left due to habitat destruction. The good news is, this pint-sized whirlybird now has a safe haven in the Emerald Hummingbird Reserve,
created by the Honduran government in 2005 with help from The Nature
Conservancy. This 12,000-acre reserve in the Yoro department protects
not just the emerald but also critically threatened dry forest habitat—sorely under-represented in the country’s national protected areas system. Dry forests here are important sites for migratory birds, reptiles, orchids and up to 50 endemic plant species.

In the few remaining patches of suitable arid thorn-forest
and scrub in Central Honduras, the emerald zips from blossom to
blossom among euphorbias, acacias, bromeliads and cactus, sipping
nectar and catcti.

The
Conservancy is strengthening capacities of these local groups and
supporting on-the-ground partners carrying out activities such as:

promoting sustainable agriculture and cattle ranching to conserve the soil,

reforesting degraded lands with native tree species,

environmental education for both students and local farmers,

creating trails and a visitor center and training ecotourism guides,

beefing up patrols and training local park guards, and

wildlife monitoring.

These
activities are helping to ensure that dry forests—and the emerald
hummingbird—remain a part of Honduras’ rich mosaic of landscapes for
generations to come

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Reindeer are milked twice a day by women of the tribe. The yogurt-like milk is four to five times more fatty than cow’s milk.
The mountainous boreal forests of the taiga are harsh, wild, and
achingly beautiful. Although not as well known as the either the Gobi
Desert or the grassy steppe of Mongolia, the taiga nevertheless
represents the world’s largest biome.
Beginning where the frozen tundra ends, the taiga’s dark, coniferous
woodlands stretch almost continuously from Eurasia across to sub-arctic
North America. It is an important place because of its tremendous
environmental value and as the home of the indigenous Dukha people and
their reindeer herds – yet it is currently under threat.

This is not an easy place
in which to live. Mostly, it is cold: the average temperature is below
32°F (0°C) and can drop all the way to a bone-chilling -65°F (-53°C).
However, in the summer months the heat can shoot all the way up to 70°F
(21°C), a massive variation from the usual chill. Yet, for the forests
of the taiga and its flora and fauna, these are the perfect conditions
for life.

The woman pictured, Chechek (Flower), was host to the photographer and is a shaman of the taiga.
For over 3,000 years, the Dukha people (also known as the Tsaatan)
have lived here, adapting their nomadic lifestyle to the extreme weather
and landscape of the taiga. During this time they have become bound to
their reindeer herds, which provide them with everything from meat,
hides and milk to a vital system of transport. Everything on the reindeer, down to the antlers, is used by the Dukha. They are a hardy people –
as they would have to be to survive in this challenging terrain. Yet
the population of the Dukha, and the reindeer on which they rely, are
dwindling, and urgent changes are needed if they are to continue with
their ancient way of life.

Photographer Uluc Kecik
traveled into the taiga to capture these pictures and meet the Dukha in
Mongolia’s northernmost reaches. “Today, the Dukha represent Mongolia's
smallest ethnic minority, with approximately 45 nomadic households
herding reindeer,” says Kecik. “They are, to varying degrees, facing
threats to their cultural survival – transitions to market-based
economies, tourism, global warming, language loss and assimilation into
the dominant majority.”
The Dukha’s Mongolian name “Tsataan” can be translated as “reindeer
herder”, reinforcing just how inextricably their whole way of living is
tied to these animals. As recently as 15 years ago, the Dukha (along
with three other nomadic tribes of the region) herded up to 15,000
reindeer between them. These days, the number has dwindled to 2,200 and
is still falling.
The reindeer themselves are tame and will often respond when called.
Traditionally, the Dukha have primarily hunted wild animals for meat,
slaughtering their reindeer only when the animals were past breeding age
and too old to be used for transport. However, these days, difficult
economic times and the decreasing amount of wildlife in the forests mean
that, more and more, herders are forced to kill and eat their reindeer
to survive.

As one United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) document puts it,
“Taiga reindeer herders, including the Dukhas, have been likened to
hunter-gatherers, rather than true pastoralists, because hunting wild
meat has played as important a role in their livelihoods as herding."

The Dukha and their reindeer move between six and ten times a year.
The taiga is normally a rich habitat, sustaining creatures such as
bears, squirrels, rabbits, badgers and, of course, reindeer. Yet, in
recent times, commercial hunting and other factors have severely
diminished the wild animal population. And not only does this result in
there being less for the Dukha to hunt, but also less for their hunting
competitors, the wolves. This means that, like the herders, wolves are
also preying on the reindeer stocks.

Another environmental problem for the taiga – and therefore the reindeer
herders – is unregulated mining. These small-scale operations,
generally searching for gold or jade, cause large-scale damage to the
forest ecosystem. Some of the undesirable side effects of the mines are
deforestation, wildfires, and contamination with toxic chemicals that
affects both the land and water sources. All of this has adverse results
for the animals living within the forest and the herders needing to
pasture their animals.Like people who live off the land all around the world, the Dukha are
also being affected by climate change. “The taiga – the Dukha homeland –
is a hotspot for biodiversity and is rich in natural resources,” says
UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner.
“But it is also one of the regions of Mongolia which could suffer the
greatest impacts of climate change over the coming decades.”

The effects of climate change in the taiga include disastrous weather
patterns. In the last twelve years, there have been seven erratic
weather events – from droughts to extreme winters – a sobering
statistic, considering the fact that there had only been three such
extreme weather events in the 60 years leading up to the year 2000.
These changes create added demand for suitable grazing land and put more
stress on the ecology and herding communities.

Trimming the antlers to allow for maneuverability in the trees.

Bad weather, overhunting, wolves and mining are unfortunately not the
only problems for reindeer herds. Another major factor in their
declining population are the effects of inbreeding and disease. For
thousands of years, the Dukha have been experts in reindeer husbandry – a
skill passed down through families for generations. In the past, this
was sufficient to keep the herds strong and healthy, but sadly it is
perhaps no longer enough. Unfortunately, much of the collective knowledge about reindeer husbandry
was lost during the mismanagement of the Soviet years. Inbreeding among
herds meant weaker stock that was more susceptible to diseases such as
brucellosis. Caused by bacteria, brucellosis leads to reproductive
problems and joint swelling in the animals it infects.

Even those reindeer uninfected by brucellosis are showing the other
adverse signs of inbreeding. For one thing, new calves are born small
and sickly. Females will also sometimes be born with fewer teats and,
when they reach child-bearing age, give birth to twins, which normally
die – two clear signs that there is not enough genetic variety in the
herd. During the 1960s and 1980s, the Soviet government tried to deal with the
low population and inbreeding problem by replenishing the herd with
reindeer from Siberia. Since the fall of the USSR, however, there have
been no more outside additions. While some suggest bringing in reindeer,
or at least their semen, from herds in Siberia, or from even further
climes such as Canada or Scandinavia, As suggested, not everyone agrees that introducing foreign stock into
these reindeer herds is a good idea. Some think that introducing new
genes will mess with the generations of adaptations the Dukha have bred
into the taiga reindeer to make them suitable for their use,
particularly as transport animals. Opponents have also pointed out that
molecular research has been done on the taiga herds, and that so far
they have been found to be no more inbred than many other similar
populations. The research continues.

Yet despite these objections, plans to introduce new blood to the herd
continue. According to a Dukha herder Bayandalai, it is definitely a
good idea. “The reindeer our ancestors used to herd were healthy,” he
says. “Today I have only one wish, and that is for the government to
bring in reindeer from Siberia, Scandinavia, or Canada. If not reindeer,
then reindeer semen.”

Whatever impact inbreeding has on the health of the reindeer herds,
there are also other factors contributing to the problem. One of these
is the increasingly stationary lifestyle of the Dukha people. Once, the
Dukha were nomadic wanderers, but the younger generations are being
lured to settle down by the promise of schools and consumer goods.
Border closings, such as that between Mongolia and Russia, and the
degradation and commercial use of land, also mean the Dukha are not as
free to graze their herds as they once were.

This restricted movement means the reindeer herds now have difficulty
getting the lichen they need for nutrition. The Dukha also believe that
the disruption of natural migration patterns, as well as climate change,
has led to more health problems like parasites and diseases. They also
blame increased transportation of the reindeer from the taiga to the
steppe, and the contact they make with livestock along the way, for
spreading infection. Added to this is the limited availability of
veterinary care for sick animals.

On the positive side, organizations such as UNEP and international NGOs
are working to help the people of the taiga retain their culture and way
of life. UNEP has made several proposals, including making a record of
traditional Dukha knowledge and promoting biodiversity in the region.
They also propose that strategies be drawn up for future land use and
that this be closely monitored for its impact on the environment

UNEP also advises that tourism be regulated so that it has a positive
rather than negative impact on the sensitive ecosystem. For this, they
recommend talks between tour operators, local government, land users and
herders to reach agreements for the benefit of all. Further, they
suggest that current hunting regulations be evaluated to measure their
impact on the Dukha and their means of support.

Of utmost importance will be a program to grow the reindeer herds and
provide them with veterinary care using, as UNEP say, both Western and
traditional knowledge. Aiding them in this is a New York-based
organization, The Totem Peoples Project, which is raising funds to
research the diseases and health problems of the taiga reindeer as well
as lobbying the local government for more support for the Dukha.

In the old days, pole houses were covered with reindeer hide; now, canvas is used.

“Reindeer are more than simply the animal which provides a livelihood
in the taiga,” says Daniel Plumley, founder of the Totem Peoples
Project. “They represent the culture here. Without the reindeer, the
culture would cease to exist.” Batulga, a Dukha reindeer specialist,
agrees. “Without the reindeer we are not Dukha,” he says.
Of the current work being done to help the Dukha and their herds,
Batulga says, “We have had success in our difficult work, but we have
only just begun. We give our deepest thanks to all who can help us, the
Dukha, to continue the proud way of our people.”
For our part, we can only hope that efforts to keep alive the
millennia-old way of life for these reindeer nomads prove successful,
and that the Dukha people and their herds will always remain part of the
Mongolian taiga.Photos: Uluc KecikWritten by: Yohani Kamarudin

Honeybee colonies have been mysteriously dying off all over the globe, leaving scientists scratching their heads—and important crops languishing in the fields unpollinated. Viruses, mites, pesticides and poor food choices have been fingered as potential culprits. And three new studies in the past week are taking aim at one of the most common types of agricultural insecticides.

Farmers worldwide have been using one popular neonicotinoid, imidacloprid, for about a decade to keep harmful insects off their cotton, corn, grains, potatoes, rice, vegetables and other crops. Like other neonicotinoids it targets the nervous system of insects, resulting in paralysis and death. Because honeybees (Apis mellifera) are insects, too, biologists have long suspected neonicotinoids as a possible force in colony collapse disorder.

Although most residue levels have not been found to kill bees on contact, the chemicals could conceivably do harm later on in these important pollinators—or their offspring–that ingest it either through nectar from sprayed crops or through the corn syrup that beekeepers feed to their bees; that syrup is made from insecticide-treated corn.

Researchers have now found that repeated low-dose exposures are perfectly capable of gradually killing of whole hives of bees. In fact, 94 percent of hives whose bees had been fed the pesticide died off entirely within less than six months, according to a new paper that will be in the June issue of Bulletin of Insectology.

Starting in the summer of 2010, Chensheng Lu, an associate professor of environmental exposure biology at Harvard School of Public Health, along with members of the Worcester County Beekeepers Association in Massachusetts, monitored 20 brand new hives. The hives were kept in four separate clusters that were at least 12 kilometers apart, ensuring the bees from each cluster would not mingle. In each cluster of hives, four hives were fed standard, commercial high-fructose corn syrup (which many honeybee keepers would feed their bees) laced with trace amounts of imidacloprid (comparable to concentrations that have been found in the environment) and one control hive was given only the high-fructose corn syrup.

The feeding began July 1st, and the imidacloprid dosing was stopped in the experimental hives at the end of September (after which all bees were fed a standard high-fructose corn syrup and granular sucrose diet). By mid-December, all of the hives had gone into over-wintering mode and were still alive. But some of the pesticide-fed hives were showing signs of weakening; scatterings of dead bees were found on the snow in front of these faltering hives.

The first experimental hive was found to be empty of bees, signaling collapse, on December 31, 2010. And by February 24, 2011, all but one imidacloprid-treated hive had any surviving bees. “Dead hives were remarkably empty except for stores of food and some pollen left on the frames,” the study authors noted. One of the control hives had fallen, the researchers noted, but it showed signs of having been infected with dysentery. The researchers did not find signs that any of the dead hives had been overtaken by the Nosema virus or Varroa mites, both of which have been suspected in the past of contributing to colony collapse disorder. This finding suggests that in some cases, insecticide alone might be able to bring down a hive.

Two other teams of researchers, based in France and the U.K., respectively, also found that hives fed with the insecticide failed to prosper. The French group reported that honeybees exposed to a similar neonicotinoid insecticide (thiamethoxam) had a harder time finding their way back to the hive, weakening the colony, possibly making it more prone to collapse. And the U.K. group fed trace amounts of the insecticide to bumble bees, whose populations have also been contracting. They found that it made the bumble bees less able to produce queens that could start new hives. Both of their papers were published in the March 30 issue of Science.

Commenting in the New York Times, an ecotoxicologist from Bayer CropScience, a company that makes imidacloprid, took issue with the French study, arguing that the bees were fed an unrealistically high doses of insecticide. The authors of the paper noted, however, that it was a distinctly sublethal dose. The authors of the Harvard-based paper tried a variety of doses (ranging from 20 micrograms of insecticide per kilogram of corn syrup to 200 micrograms), all of which led to colony deaths. “Our experiment included pesticide amounts below what is normally present in the environment,” Lu said in a prepared statement. “It apparently doesn’t take much of the pesticide to affect the bees.”

Lu and his colleagues are unsure why the insecticide might have resulted in such a delayed colony death, especially as many of the bees that would have fed on the pesticide-infused syrup would have already been replaced by a new generation by the wintertime. They hypothesize that the low levels of the toxin might have affected larval growth and led to weaker adults.

More work will need to be done to determine how these small doses of insecticide might be killing off bee colonies—and how it might be contributing to other observed plagues, such as mites and viruses, and even parasites that seem to put honeybees into a zombie-like state, as a report earlier this year indicated.

But work will need to be swift. At least a third of U.S. honeybee colonies have died out in the past six years. “The significance of bees to agricultural cannot be understated,” Lu said. They pollinate about one third of U.S. crop species, including almonds, apples, grapes, soybeans, cotton, and others, the failure of which could lead not only to food shortages, but also to large economic hits for farmers—and consumers.

About the Author: Katherine Harmon is an associate editor for Scientific American covering health, medicine and life sciences.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

The critically endangered
Kakapo, one of the world's few flightless birds and a member of the
parrot family, is the heaviest parrot, is one of the longest living, and
is nocturnal and herbivorous. As of 2010 there were only 124
individuals known, so few that each one of them has been given a name
and a radio transmitter.The Kakapo Recovery Plan
has done herculean work to preserve and increase the population. All
known kakapos were relocated to two islands where stoats and feral cats
had been removed, Codfish and Anchor Island. Both islands will hold 100
kakapos each and work is ongoing to find a suitable island where one day
kakapos will be able to live free from human management such as the
sanctuaries. Two possibilities have been identified by the department of
conservation and it seems some work is already being done to prepare
them. Out of all the birds on the list, the kakapo has a good chance
because the government is so intimately involved in trying to protect
the species.

Monday, August 6, 2012

Montana Grizzly Encounter - Brutus the Bear

Welcome to Montana Grizzly Encounter; a
Grizzly Bear Rescue & Education Sanctuary in Bozeman, Montana.
Founded in 2004, it provides a spacious and natural home for rescued
grizzlies. At the same time it provides a place where the public can
come and learn about grizzly bears as they watch the majestic animals
“up close” in a beautiful mountain setting.

All of our bears were born in
unfortunate captive situations and could NEVER be released into the
wild. The bears have been rescued from often inhumane captive
situations all over the U.S.

We give the bears the best possible life
here at the sanctuary. We give people an opportunity to see and
understand this awesome creature safely, up close, with no bars or cages
to obstruct the view. The Grizzly Encounter is open to school groups
free of charge, and each year thousands of children learn about grizzly
bear safety and conservation. In this way, Brutus and the Grizzly
Encounter are doing their best to help insure that there will be wild
bears in our forests for generations to come.

Bart the bear's Legacy

Bart is one of the most accomplished
animal actors of all time, starring in many of films including: Dr.
Dolittle, The bear, clan of the cave bear, The edge, and pretty much any
other film in need of a good bear.

He was born in 1977 at a zoo
and soon after adopted by Doug and Lynn Seus. They developed a huge bond
with bart and gave him probably the best life any bear could have.

Bart
died in 2000 due to cancer at the age of 23. He was over 9 feet tall
and weighed 1780 pounds. It's amazing that doug wrestled and played with
this bear on a daily bases for a span of many years without ever
getting seriously injured. Doug understood how to interact with bart
such as you ALWAYS keep bart happy. He also blew into his nose to keep
calm him down if he ever got to excited. No matter how much love you
know wild animal has for you, it is important to remember that they can
hurt you even if they don't want to...

The Vital Ground Foundationhelps
preserve the threatened grizzly bear, other animals, plants, and
natural communities through the conservation of habitat and wildlife
linkage areas.

With the grizzly bear as its compass, Vital
Ground works to reconnect fragmented landscapes in the U.S. and Canada
critical to wildlife movement and biodiversity. Because the grizzly's
range covers several hundred square miles—from alpine meadows to valley
bottoms—protecting and expanding habitat and migration corridors
important to the Great Bear benefits entire animal and plant communities
in the wildest, yet most imperiled, places left in North America.

Gua Africa was founded by Emmanuel Jal, a South Sudanese ex-child
soldier turned world renowned recording artist. The word GUA (pronounced
gwaah) means peace in Nuer, a Sudanese tribal language.

Our mission is to work with individuals, families and communities
to help them overcome the effects of war & poverty. Our projects are
based in both Sudan and Kenya with a focus on providing education to
children & young adults who would otherwise be denied this
opportunity.
In April 2008 we were granted full UK charity status and also
received our NGO registration in South Sudan. In April 2011 we received
our NGO status in Kenya.

License: Standard YouTube License

Friday, August 3, 2012

The Golden Toad of Costa Rica, extinct since around 1989. Its disappearance has been attributed to a confluence of several factors, including El Niño warming, fungus, and the introduction of invasive species.

The dodo, a flightless bird of Mauritius, became extinct during the mid-late seventeenth century after humans destroyed the forests where the birds made their homes and introduced mammals that ate their eggs.

"We have reason to believe from a reliable source that, once in Costa Rica, the Japanese government may have sought extradition of Captain Watson to Japan to answer charges related to obstructing their illegal whaling activities in the Southern Ocean whale sanctuary," Hartland said.

Watson, one of the original founders of Greenpeace, gained fame through the Whale Wars TV show in which he and his crew are shown attempting to disrupt Japanese whalers.

However, he was being detained in Germany on charges relating to an incident at sea in Central America in 2002. and Japan wants him...

Subterfuge: Hold him on previously dropped charges so he could be then sent to japan for their revenge for losing face in the past being exposed for whaling in the name of research...

In October last year maritime violation charges that had been previously dropped over the incident were reinstated by a Costa Rican prosecutor and an international arrest warrant was issued.

Costa Rica has insisted that he would get a fair trial if extradited. However, Sea Shepherd has claimed that he would be in danger if he entered the penal system in the country.

Who could believe the entreaties to "trust" the word of a prosecutor that was 'shabby' in their treatment of him last time Costa Rica arrested him?

Prosecutors in Costa Rica had dropped the charges against Watson only to reinstate them 10 years later in what looks like an attempt to trap Watson for the Japanese with the cooperation of Germany...

Paul Watson and his current plight underline the conflict that arises between commercial interests and the battle to save endangered species...

This video talks about a rare species of animals being collected for the Pet Trade. Nothing is more attractive to a certain group of people than a rare and endangered animal kept for display in their homes.

Freaks and Creeps:
Sungazer Lizard

A Hole in the Sun

Sungazer lizards get their name from their habit of sitting with
their nose up pointed at the sky. It looks like they're staring at the
sun! Like all reptiles, sungazers are cold-blooded.
To get warm in the morning, they sit and let the sun's rays heat them
up. But no one really knows why they always sit in that heads-up
position.

Sungazers dig burrows for homes. There may be up to 40 sungazers
living in one spot, but each has its own hole. The lizards spend the day
catching the sun's rays and snatching insects that pass by. Sometimes, a
sungazer hunts for food a few yards away from its hole, but never goes
very far. The burrow is the lizard's safe spot.

The spiney scales covering a sungazer's body are good protection from
most predators. After all, who would want to get a mouthful of spikes?
Believe it or not, jackals, badgers and birds of prey
hunt these lizards. If they can get ahold of a sungazer, they have ways
of getting around the sharp parts. But getting ahold of a sungazer lizard isn't so easy. When it senses danger, the lizard dashes into its burrow and shakes its spikey tail as a warning to leave it alone. If a predator grabs the lizard's tail to pull it out of the hole, the lizard puffs its body up with air so that the sharp pointy scales dig into the side of the burrow. The harder the predator pulls, the tighter the sungazer becomes stuck in the tunnel!

Dr. Sanduk Ruit — Co-Director Himalayan Cataract Project

Dr Sanduk Ruit was born in
Olangchungola, Nepal, a remote village in Eastern Nepal. So remote the
nearest school was a week's walk away. And there were no health posts.
Ruit's sister died of tuberculosis when he was 17. This experience led
him to become a doctor.

License: Standard YouTube License

Dr.
Sanduk Ruit’s soul mission has been, and continues to be, to bring
eyesight back to anyone who needs it, regardless of his or her ability
to pay — and to do so with pre- and post-operative care that rivals the
highest quality health care throughout the world.

Dr. Ruit
developed a sutureless form of cataract surgery, a technique that allows
safe, high-volume, low-budget operations. A masterful surgeon, he can
perform dozens of flawless cataract operations at eye camps over a
12-hour day. Working tirelessly at the operating table he says “the
surgical chair is the most comfortable place on Earth that I have.”

Ruit was the first Nepali doctor to perform cataract surgery with
intraocular lens implants and the first to pioneer a method for
delivering high-quality microsurgical procedures in remote eye camps.
Ruit was continually innovating. His ingenuity allowed for a sutureless
form of surgery that was safe, high quality, high-volume and
inexpensive. In the face of heavy skepticism from other doctors in the
field, Dr. Ruit tirelessly worked to prove that high quality care could
be successfully delivered in places considered squalid by western
standards. As a tribute to his remarkable achievements, Dr. Ruit has
received some of the highest awards in the field of international health
possible.

Dr. Ruit helped found the Tilganga Eye Centre in 1994. Tilganga
treats 2,500 patients a week and surgery fees are waived for the
neediest. Because many of the poor and blind cannot make it to
Kathmandu, Dr. Ruit reaches out to them by trekking into remote parts of
Nepal and throughout the Himalayas. Dr. Ruit and colleagues from
Tilganga have worked as far afield as North Korea, Cambodia, Bangladesh,
Vietnam, Ethiopia and Ghana (among many other countries).

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My Blogs have been used as a second hard drive, in case of crashes in equipment. Google is a safe place to store information collected while surfing the WWW. If any content does not seem to adhere to Creative Commons Rules and you want it removed, please contact me to have it removed from the blog. Everything is true to the best of my knowledge.

About Me

Jennifer believes we live in the garden of Eden and I believe that we are destroying it. Our saving grace is within ourselves, our faith, and our mindfulness. We need to make a conscious effort to respect and preserve all life.